It appears that Gaudí achieved his greatest fame and renown
in 1910, gaining the attention of some Americans who asked him to build
a hotel in New York. An exhibition on Gaudí's work, promoted by Eusebi Güell,
was held in the Grand Palais in Paris, from April to June of 1910, and some
of the plans and photographs exhibited there were also taken a year later
to the I Salón de Arquitectura (First Annual Architecture Show) in Madrid.
In 1911, he had Maltese fever, and stayed for a time in Puigcerda, where
his condition worsened and, believing his time had come, he made out his
will. To the day of his death, he worked exclusively on the Sagrada Família,
and in 1925 moved his residence to the studio he had on the premises.

Old Gaudí and his death

In his old age, Gaudí was a man that was conformed with
little and dressed without much care; so much so that the day of his accident
nobody recognized him as he lay on the ground. On June 7, 1926, he was run
over by a tram at the intersection of Carrer de Bailén and the Gran Vía,
and the taxi drivers refused to take a poor vagabond to the hospital (the
municipal police fined them later for not assisting an injured man). He
did not seek out contact with journalists and he avoided cameras, so there
are few photographs of the architect.

This change in attitude may have been caused by a series
of events that took place beginning in 1912. That year, his niece, Rosa
Egea, who lived with him in Barcelona, died. In 1914, his faithful collaborator,
Francesc Berenguer Mestres, died, and for matters of professional fees,
he was confronted with the Milà family in litigation. In 1915, the continuity
of the construction of the Sagrada Familia was endangered by a serious economic
crisis. En 1914, construction of the Colonia Güell was definitively interrupted.
Two years later, his friend, Doctor Torras i Bages, Archbishop of Vic, died.
In 1918, his best friend and patron, Eusebi Güell, passed away. They were
sad events that affected him but did not limit his energy and desire to
see his greatest work, the Sagrada Família, come into being.

Gaudí died at the age of 74 (June 10, 1926), but if it hadn't
been for the tram he may have lived many more years, since his father had
lived to the age of 93, with all his vigor. Half of Barcelona dressed in
black to give final homage to a man that had become very popular, although
few had ever met him personally. His body was buried in the crypt of the
edifice where he had worked for the last 43 years of his life, the Sagrada
Familia.